BALTIMORE -- The Pittsburgh Steelers are AFC North champions, and earning the crown at the expense of the Baltimore Ravens added an extra measure of joy to the accomplishment.

Santonio Holmes caught a 4-yard touchdown pass from Ben Roethlisberger with 43 seconds left, and the Steelers clinched their second straight division title and earned a first-round bye by beating Baltimore 13-9 Sunday.

Fast Facts

• The Steelers swept the Ravens for first time since 2002, snapping a five-game losing streak at Baltimore along the way.

• Pittsburgh has now allowed 13 points or less in five straight games.

• For the second straight week, the Steelers won despite trailing with less than 2:30 left in the game.

• This was the fourth time Pittsburgh won by four points or less this season.

In a duel between the top two defenses in the NFL, Pittsburgh did not permit a touchdown in earning its first win in Baltimore since 2002.

As the Steelers filed into the locker room, a voice rose from the crowd of players: "We're still the No. 1 defense! We showed you boys how to play defense!"

Pittsburgh (11-3) limited the Ravens (9-5) to a season-low 202 yards. The Steelers have gone 14 straight games without yielding 300 yards, tying the 1973 Los Angeles Rams for the longest streak to start a season since the NFL merger in 1970.

Curtain Call

Pittsburgh held Baltimore to just 202 total yards on Sunday, marking the 14th straight game the Steelers defense has held an opponent under 300 yards. That ties the '73 Rams for the longest such streak to start a season since the merger. Here's a look at the list:

Team

Streak

Season

Rams

14

1973

Steelers

14

2008

49ers

12

2007

Many of the players wore hats that proclaimed Pittsburgh as AFC North champions.

Running back Willie Parker said, "This is like our biggest win. I know we won the Super Bowl, but you just can't understand the feeling of the players in this locker room right now."

Pittsburgh trailed 9-6 before moving 92 yards in 13 plays to score the game's lone touchdown and take the lead for the first time. Roethlisberger went 7-for-11 for 89 yards on the drive.

Pittsburgh has come from behind in the fourth quarter four times this season, including last week against Dallas, when the Steelers scored 17 points in the final 8 minutes of a 20-13 win over Dallas.

"We make the plays when they count," Holmes said. "It doesn't matter how the game goes through the course of three quarters. It always comes down to playing four quarters of football."

Matt Stover kicked three field goals for the Ravens, who remain in the wild-card hunt despite being eliminated from the division race.

"We'll be fine," said rookie quarterback Joe Flacco, who went 11-for-28 for 115 yards and two interceptions.

The Steelers began their final drive at their 8 with 3:36 left. Two straight completions to Hines Ward moved the ball to the 34, and a third-and-10 completion to Nate Washington for 16 yards got Pittsburgh to midfield.

Washington caught a 24-yarder to the 14, and a 10-yard pass to Ward set up first-and-goal at the 4. After two incompletions, Roethlisberger scrambled left, then found Holmes over the middle for the winner.

The play was reviewed because it appeared that while Holmes' feet were in the end zone, the ball was not.

Later, referee Walt Coleman said, "He had two feet down. When he gained control of the ball, the ball was breaking the plane."

Said Lewis: "That didn't win or lose the game for us."

Down 9-3, the Steelers used a 30-yard pass from Roethlisberger to Ward to set up a 30-yard field goal by Jeff Reed with 9:26 to go.

Baltimore then moved to the Pittsburgh 27, but a third-down sack forced the Ravens to punt, setting up the dramatic conclusion.

"They got a big sack when they had to at the end of the game ... then took the ball down the field and scored," Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. "That's the way they've won games."

Baltimore used an outstanding punt and a turnover to take the 9-3 third-quarter lead. After Sam Koch punted to the Pittsburgh 1, Holmes caught a pass but fumbled when hit by Samari Rolle. Ed Reed returned the ball to the 16, setting up a 28-yard field goal.

Later in the quarter, Holmes muffed a punt. Pittsburgh's Keyaron Fox took the loose ball 18 yards to the Baltimore 33, but Roethlisberger fumbled when sacked by Terrell Suggs on third-and-1 and Brandon McKinney plucked the loose ball out of the air for the Ravens.

Tempers flared after the play, and Baltimore's Haloti Ngata received a 15-yard penalty for vigorously pulling a Pittsburgh player from the angry crowd.

No surprise, given the sentiment on both sidelines in this intense rivalry.

"This was your typical Ravens-Steelers football game," Roethlisberger said. "I've got cuts and bruises as do other guys in [our] locker room, and I'm sure they do. It was physical, low-scoring -- just like everyone thought it was going to be."

Game notes

The Steelers have seven interceptions in their last three games and at least one in six straight contests. ... Baltimore's Mark Clayton had three catches to move into third place on the team's career list. ... Pittsburgh swept the season series for the first time since 2002.